Menu du Jour stretches 22.13 meters of food delivery options
Menu du Jour is a conceptual installation by Zélé Collective that translates the digital interface of food delivery services into a large-scale physical object. The work takes the form of a restaurant menu measuring 22.13 meters in length and is constructed from data manually gathered from the Uber Eats platform. The installation invites viewers to confront algorithmic excess, decision anxiety, and the paradox of infinite choice.
At exactly 12:00 PM on a weekday, all available dishes, including starters, mains, and desserts, were recorded manually, without the use of scripts or automated tools. This process highlights the extensive, repetitive labor involved in interfacing with algorithmic systems that appear seamless to users. The collected information was formatted following the graphic conventions of traditional restaurant menus: serif typefaces, typographic hierarchy, and red grid lines. These visual cues reference the physical menus typically found in cafés and bistros, establishing a contrast between analog familiarity and digital excess.
all images courtesy of Charles-Antoine De Sousa, Zélé Collective
Zélé Collective prints a physical archive of digital abundance
By presenting this data in a continuous, scroll-like form, the installation materializes the volume of algorithmically delivered choices. The piece explores the cognitive overload caused by choice saturation, and the strange tension between digital fluidity and physical exhaustion. ‘It’s part of an ongoing reflection on our relationship to consumption, decision-making, and information excess in platform culture. Menu du Jour is both humorous and critical, a physical confrontation with the invisible structures shaping our daily appetites,’ shares artist Charles-Antoine De Sousa, member of Zélé Art Collective.
the installation physically visualizes the entire Uber Eats menu
the work critiques algorithmic abundance and its effect on decision-making
Menu du Jour stretches 22.13 meters across the gallery floor
a physical archive of countless digital food choices
endless listings turn into a single, continuous form
Serif fonts recall classic restaurant menu design
analog aesthetics meet digital content in this oversized menu scroll
the installation invites viewers to confront infinite choice as material reality
manual labor contrasts the apparent convenience of delivery apps
the menu scroll evokes the format of traditional bistro menus
a snapshot of digital consumption captured in print
the installation documents the paradox of seamless interfaces and invisible effort
Charles-Antoine De Sousa reinterprets digital routines through physical space
the format emphasizes accumulation and repetition
a commentary on daily interactions with platform algorithms
project info:
name: Menu du jour
designer: Zélé Collective | @zele_collective, Charles-Antoine De Sousa | @desouzzzzz
designboom has received this project from our DIY submissions feature, where we welcome our readers to submit their own work for publication. see more project submissions from our readers here.
edited by: christina vergopoulou | designboom
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